8/30/2012

Caring for the Poor is Government's Biblical Role




From Sojourners, Click HERE for the link
by Jim Wallis 08-30-2012

There is hardly a more controversial political battle in America today than that around the role of government. The ideological sides have lined up, and the arguments rage about the size of government: how big, how small should it be? Some famously have said government should be shrunk so small that it "could be drowned in a bathtub."

But I want to suggest that what size the government should be is the wrong question. A more useful discussion would be about the purposes of government and whether ours is fulfilling them. So let's look at what the Bible says.

The words of Paul in the 13th chapter of Romans are perhaps the most extensive teaching in the New Testament about the role and purposes of government. Paul says those purposes are twofold: to restrain evil by punishing evildoers and to serve peace and orderly conduct by rewarding good behavior. Civil authority is designed to be "God's servant for your good" (13:4). Today we might say "the common good" is to be the focus and goal of government.

So the purpose of government, according to Paul, is to protect and promote. Protect from the evil and promote the good, and we are even instructed to pay taxes for those purposes. So to disparage government per se —to see government as the central problem in society — is simply not a biblical position.

First, government is supposed to protect its people. That certainly means protecting its citizens' safety and security. Crime and violence will always be real in this world, and that's why we have the police, who are meant to keep our streets, neighborhoods, and homes safe.

Governments also need to protect their people judicially, and make sure our legal and court systems are procedurally just and fair. The biblical prophets regularly rail against corrupt court decisions and systems, in which the wealthy and powerful manipulate the legal processes for their own benefit and put the poor into greater debt or distress. The prophet Amos speaks directly to the courts (and government) when he says, "Hate evil, love good; maintain justice in the courts" (Amos 5:15 NIV).

But along with protecting, what should governments promote? The prophets hold kings, rulers, judges, and even employers accountable to the demands of justice and fairness, therefore promoting those values.

And the Scriptures say that governmental authority is to protect the poor in particular. The biblical prophets are consistent and adamant in their condemnation of injustice to the poor, and frequently follow their statements by requiring the king (the government) to act justly. That prophetic expectation did not apply only to the kings of Israel but was also extended to the kings of neighboring lands and peoples.

Jeremiah, speaking of King Josiah, said, "He defended the cause of the poor and needy, and so all went well." 

Psalm 72 begins with a prayer for kings or political leaders: "Give the king your justice, O God, and your righteousness to a king's son. May he judge your people with righteousness, and your poor with justice. May the mountains yield prosperity for the people, and the hills, in righteousness. May he defend the cause of the poor of the people, give deliverance to the needy, and crush the oppressor." 

There is a powerful vision here for promoting the common good — a vision of "righteous" prosperity for all the people, with special attention to the poor and to "deliverance" for the most vulnerable and needy, and even a concern for the land.

Evangelical theologian Ron Sider says:
The biblical understanding of justice clearly includes both procedural and distributive aspects. That the procedures must be fair is clear in the several texts that demand unbiased courts (Exodus 23:2-8; Leviticus 19:15; Deuteronomy 1:17; 10:17-19). That distributive justice (i.e., fair outcomes) is also a central part of justice is evident not just from the hundreds of texts about God's concern for the poor ... but also in the meaning of the key Hebrew words for justice (mishpat and tsedaqah).
Time and again the prophets use mishpat and tsedaqah to refer to fair economic outcomes. Immediately after denouncing Israel and Judah for the absence of justice, the prophet Isaiah condemns the way rich and powerful landowners have acquired all the land by pushing out small farmers (Isaiah 5:7-9). It is important to note that even though in this text the prophet does not say the powerful acted illegally, he nevertheless denounces the unfair outcome.

Notice that Sider says "fair outcomes" and not "equal outcomes." The political right's continuing accusation against all who would hold governments accountable for justice is that we are really aiming for equal outcomes from public policy. But that simply is not true.

Indeed, the historical attempts by many Marxist governments to create equal outcomes have dramatically shown the great dangers of how the concentration of power in a few government hands has led to totalitarian results. The theological reason for that is the presence and power of sin, and the inability of such fallible human creatures to create social utopias on earth.

Yet the biblical prophets do hold their rulers, courts, and judges, and landowners and employers accountable to the values of fairness, justice, and even mercy. The theological reasons for that are, in fact, the same: the reality of evil and sin in the concentration of power — both political and economic — and the need to hold that power accountable to justice, especially in the protection of the poor. So fair outcomes, and not equal ones, are the goal of governments.

Governments should provide a check on powerful people, institutions, and interests in the society that, if left unchecked, might run over their fellow citizens, the economy, and certainly the poor.

If government is rendered unable to "punish the evil" and "reward the good" when it comes to the behavior of huge corporations and banks, for example, exactly who else is going to do that? And coming to a better moral balance in achieving fiscal responsibility, while protecting the poor, should be a bipartisan effort.

The radically anti-government ideology of the current right wing Tea Party ideology is simply contrary to a more biblical view of government, the need for checks and balances, the sinfulness of too much concentrated power in either the government or the market, the responsibilities we have for our neighbor and the God-ordained purposes of government — in addition to the churches — in serving the common good and, in particular, to protect the poor.

Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: A Guide for Economic and Moral Recovery, and CEO of Sojourners. Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis.

8/27/2012

10W for September 2nd, Clean Hands, P14.

The following is a 10 minute worship for September 2nd, Clean Hands, P14. You can either listen on the flash player below or download it to your favorite music program to sync with your mp3 player by clicking on "DOWNLOAD" or play it on your smartphone's music player by clicking PLAY. You now also have the option of receiving these notices each week and on festival days by signing up for the 10W constant contact email list on the 10W blog or on your phone by texting 10W to 22828. The song for the day is,"Change of Heart" by Janie Lidey from the CD "Just Breath It In" which can be purchased HERE

Opening Litany based on Psalm 15




Pastor: LORD, who may dwell in your sanctuary?

Congregation: The One whose walk is blameless and who does what is righteous; The one who speaks the truth from his heart and utters no slander. It is the one who does his neighbor no wrong and casts no slur on others. 
 
Pastor: LORD, Who may live on your holy hill?

Congregation: It is the one who despises what is vile in humanity and honors those who fear the LORD; it is the one who keeps an oath even when it hurts. It is the one who lends his money without interest and the one who does not accept a donation to vote against the needs of the innocent. 

Pastor: Such a person will never be shaken.

Congregation: Help us to walk in your ways O Lord.

Poem on 14th Sunday after Pentecost Mark 7:1-23


The young child grew and blossomed
Full of love and joy
Each morning was greeted with a song
And laughter
And a glass of spilled milk
Graciously lapped up
By her best furry friend
Under her chair
And her days were filled with new adventures
Exploding her horizons
With each new discovery
And a fair sampling of dirt
Smeared from soiled hands
To now soiled clothes
Until one day
The clouds seemed to cover the sun
Differently
Than they did before
And she learned not to spill her milk
Though she never did figure out
How
To feed her furry friend
And one day
She learned something new about dirt
And where she could not play
And where she could not wipe her hands
She also learned other things
She could not do
Until one day
While sitting there sad
And very still
She learned
She was a good girl

even if it hurts


Sunday September 2nd, Psalm 15: LORD, who may dwell in your sanctuary?  Who may live on your holy hill?  The one whose walk is blameless, who does what is righteous, who speaks the truth from his heart who has no slander on his tongue, who does his neighbor no wrong.  The list of what is good and what is evil from God’s view has often been manipulated by those who wish it were something different, perhaps their point of view, perhaps more profitable or supportive of their power structure.  Who is blameless?  The one who speaks truth from the heart.  As we remember the world events of the last several years, I am struck by the fact that in real buying power of those at the middle and bottom of the wage scale are worse off than at any time since 1947 and fewer and fewer people, working and unemployed, can afford decent health care.  I am struck by the continued growth of wealth of the wealthiest among us while at the same time the continued growth of those who have to do with less and less each day.   I am saddened by the number of casualties brought about by the quest for power and money in this world.  Who may dwell in your sanctuary?  Each of us, but only through your grace.  Help us to speak the truth from our hearts dear Lord, even if it hurts.  

bring the hope


Monday September 3rd, James 1: 17 Whatever is good and perfect comes to us from God above, who created all heaven's lights. Unlike them, he never changes or casts shifting shadows. 18 In his goodness he chose to make us his own children by giving us his true word. And we, out of all creation, became his choice possession.    Even in the midst of economic collapse and continued wars, people find hope.  It comes not from the things you can buy but rather the things you cannot buy.  Hope is a gift of God.  Hope rebuilds houses, lives and dreams.  Hope brings people back together and rebuilds relationships.  Hope surrounds each one of us with loving arms and then sends us out with our arms, the arms of God, to bring hope to others.  It is that hope, the hope that comes from God, which is good and perfect.  As God’s children, created in God’s image, our highest calling is to bring the hope of Christ with us as we reach out, serve, and incite miracles in this world.   

Anger


Tuesday September 4th, James 1: 19 My dear brothers and sisters, be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry. 20 Your anger can never make things right in God's sight. I get angry, sometimes very angry.  Jesus got angry, sometimes very angry.  Anger is not always a bad thing and sometimes anger, holy anger, is what motivates us finally to work for justice and bring about change in this world.  Anger is sometimes closer to the will of God than that perpetually fake smile often seen on religious TV.  But there is a reason the word anger is part of the word danger, anger can easily slip over edge.  Righteous anger is only one small step from self-righteous anger.  The danger comes when it starts to feel good and a little smug about that anger instead of being bothered by it.  “Of the Seven Deadly Sins, anger is possible the most fun.  To like your wounds, to smack your lips over grievances long past, to roll over your tongue the prospect of bitter confrontations to come, to savor to the last toothsome morsel both the pain your are given and the pain you are giving back – in many ways it is a feast fit for a king.  The chief drawback is that what you are wolfing down is yourself.  The skeleton at the feast is you.”  Wishful Thinking by Frederick Buechner

orphans


Wednesday September 5th, James 1: 26 If you claim to be religious but don't control your tongue, you are just fooling yourself, and your religion is worthless. 27 Pure and lasting religion in the sight of God our Father means that we must care for orphans and widows in their troubles, and refuse to let the world corrupt us.  When you hear the phrase “orphans and widows” keep in mind that in Jesus day, they were the marginalized.  Today the marginalized go by different names.  The battle seems to be on across this nation to declare in rhetoric or outright statements that everyone except the power elite are  marginalized in one way or another. You often hear the phrase the God helps those who help themselves.  It sounds good, pithy, and biblical, the only trouble is that it is not in the Bible as a phrase or as an idea.  It is the antithesis Jesus’ teaching to care for the least, lost and lonely, and to welcome the sojourner among us.  The call of the Bible is to help those who cannot help themselves.  A living wage, public option in a health care bill, child care, and legalized same sex marriage are things that come to mind.  In the end, a nation will be judged not by how many millionaires and billionaires it has, but how it treats the least, lost and lonely.  

New?!?!


Thursday September 6th, Mark 7:  1 The Pharisees and some of the teachers of the law who had come from Jerusalem gathered around Jesus and 2 saw some of his disciples eating food with hands that were "unclean," that is, unwashed.  5 So the Pharisees and teachers of the law asked Jesus, "Why don't your disciples live according to the tradition of the elders instead of eating their food with 'unclean' hands?" 6 He replied, "Isaiah was right when he prophesied about you hypocrites; as it is written:  " 'These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.  It’s called lip service.  Putting on a good show, but lacking anything of real substance.  Sometimes, it is the epitome of evil, and the real reason for the show is just to hide downright deceit.  I love a church where people don’t dress up, it seems more real to me, a bit dirty on the outside and a bit dirty on the inside, like life.  Some of our traditions have outlived their usefulness and though they may have sprung from honest roots they have outlived their life and are now mostly for show and they need to be jettisoned.  Some of our traditions need a new facelift, and some need to be resurrected from the file cabinet and given new life.  One thing to remember about churches, a healthy one is always willing to jettison a tradition and take on a new one for the sake of reaching those who are not yet a part of that church, an unhealthy church is always willing to jettison those who are not in the pews for the sake of keeping their traditions.  Most of our churches are a combination.  

adiaphora


Friday September 7th, Mark 7:  7 They worship me in vain; their teachings are but rules taught by men.' 8 You have let go of the commands of God and are holding on to the traditions of men."  Back to basics.  When Jesus was asked which was the greatest commandment he stated that we are to love the Lord with all our heart soul and mind and to love our neighbor as ourselves.  All of the gospel flows from this.  All of the big hot button issues in religion and society have more to do with what some people would like to see as rules and the quest for power, than with the commands of God.  The equal rights struggle in the U.S. and the attempts to marginalize women and minorities has more to do with power and preaching to the political base than it does anything found in scripture. If it does not fit under loving God and loving others, it is less than just adiaphora, it is sin.

back at ya


Saturday September 8th, Mark 7:  20 He went on: "What comes out of a man is what makes him 'unclean.' 21 For from within, out of men's hearts, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, 22 greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, slander, arrogance and folly. 23 All these evils come from inside and make a man 'unclean.' "  In the original writing there is no numbering.  Verse 21 and verse 22 are just one long list.  We tend to get caught up on verse 21 and forget all about 22.  Perhaps we would be better off putting our focus on verse 22.  Wow, how politics as usual would change.  Verse 21 tends to give us things in which we can get away with pointing our fingers at someone else.  Verse 22 looks and the fingers on our own hand pointing back at us.  If I was going to preach on this text, I would take verse 21 out and place it on the end as an addendum.  The text was meant to clean up our hearts, not someone else’s heart.  

8/20/2012

Poem based on John 6:56-69



We study the words and signs
--(trapped)
and try to understand
--(trapped)
the Greatness
--that is God
the words come to us
limited
--to a fraction
of the message of Love
by our words
--(trapped)
How can we understand
How can we really know
The expanse
--the expanse of God’s word
when we are trapped by words
and what they mean
only in relation
to what we know
--in this life
trying to understand
--the workings of the spirit
locked in our own intellect
and limited by it
Christ said we are free
Free to see
--to know God
through Christ
through eating Christ’ body
--and drinking Christ’ blood
through knowing Christ
--not from a distance
but right here
now
by what Christ does
to me
--(faith)
from deep within

Opening Litany based on Psalm 34



Pastor: I will exult the Lord at all times in my life.  The Praise of the Lord will be forever on my lips. 

Congregation: We too will glory in the Lord.  Let all who are afflicted hear the good news of the Lord and rejoice with us as we exult the name of the Lord together. 

Pastor: In my time of need, when I sought after the Lord, the Lord answered me and delivered me from all my fears.  The Lord will do the same for you!

Congregation: Those who dwell in the presence of the Lord… their faces are radiant and never covered with shame.

Pastor: The ones that the world rejects who call upon the name of the Lord.. the Lord will be with them and help them in the midst of their troubles.

Congregation: The angel of the Lord encamps around those who live in awe of the Lord and the Lord delivers them from all the woes and cares of this world. 

Pastor: As we gather around the table of the Lord this day, taste and see that the LORD is good and blessed is the one who takes refuge in the Lord. 

Congregation: As the Holy people of God, we will live in awe of the wonders of the Lord, for those who live this way lack nothing of importance in this life. 

Pastor: the strong and mighty may grow weak and hungry, but those who seek the Lord lack no good thing.  So come my children, listen, and learn to live in awe of the wonders of the Lord.  Whoever loves the Lord, and desires to live in the blessings of the Lord, keep your tongue from evil, your lips from telling lies, turn from evil and seek peace in this world. 

Congregation: For the Lord looks upon the righteous and hears the cries of their hearts, but the God of Grace turns a deaf ear to those who seek evil. 

Pastor: The righteous cry and the Lord hears them, the brokenhearted and those for whom the world has crushed their spirit wail and the Lord delivers them from their troubles. 

Congregation:   The righteous may have many troubles, but the LORD delivers them and protects them from being broken.  

Pastor: Evil will slay the wicked and the foes of the righteous will be condemned but the Lord will rescue those who love the Lord.

Congregation: All who take refuge in the Lord will live surrounded by the greatness of God’s grace.  

amour armor


Sunday August 26th, Ephesians 6:  Be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power. Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil's schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.  It is way too easy for us to fall into the trap of assuming that our struggle is with others.  We make our list of enemies, we draw lines, we decide who is in and who is out, and then we sit back and feel good about our idea that we are right and that other group is wrong.  What we find when that happens is that we have just fallen into the trap we were supposed to remain strong against.  Once we start drawing lines, we find ourselves on one side with “the powers of this dark world” and Jesus on the other side with those we have excluded.  That doesn’t mean we can’t argue ideas, policies and procedures, but the people are still made in the image of God. Time to suit up, be strong, and love one another.  The Armor is for Amour. 

peace is no fun


Monday August 27th, Ephesians 6: Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand. Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace.  First thing of note is that in the midst of all the military talk, the armor is all defensive, not offensive.  No first strike here, only the power to withstand the onslaught the powers of darkness through at you.  The second thing of note is that we get ready to withstand this onslaught because we hold onto the gospel of peace.  Peace is no fun for the powers of darkness, they would much rather we have some enemies to attack, that way everyone loses.  When we create enemies to attack, we too lose.  

just read it


Tuesday August 28th, Ephesians 6: Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. And we will pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests.  There is no lack of people trying to tell you what the Bible says on this subject or that.  “Never do people do evil so cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction. The true miracle is that there is not more downright wickedness in all the religious institutions of the world.” (William Sloane Coffin)  The best way to find out what the scripture says is to read it yourself.  This year, before the election, sit down and read one of the Gospels from start to finish in one setting.  Then pray, and then vote.  It is a good way to make decisions in all of life.  

closet gods


Wednesday August 29th, Joshua 24:  14 "Now therefore fear the LORD and serve him in sincerity and in faithfulness. Put away the gods that your fathers served beyond the River and in Egypt, and serve the LORD. 15 And if it is evil in your eyes to serve the LORD, choose this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your fathers served in the region beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites in whose land you dwell. But as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD."  We all have a whole closet full of gods we serve.  Take stock some time on where you spend your money and where you spend your time, and most importantly, where you spend your mental time, that is where you will find your gods and get an idea of how much time you spend serving them.  Serving the Lord God, is a conscious effort.  It is not something you do when you are not doing anything else, is it what makes doing those other things have meaning.  Who will you serve this day, the gods in your closets or the Lord?  To not choose is to choose the closet.  

three fold creation


Thursday August 30th, John 6: 56 Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me, and I in him. 57 Just as the living Father sent me and I live because of the Father, so the one who feeds on me will live because of me. 58 This is the bread that came down from heaven. Your forefathers ate manna and died, but he who feeds on this bread will live forever." We were created in and for relationship.  We are related to the God who created us and loves us and it is in God we find our life and ability to live and love in this world.  Jesus, as the son of God continues this relationship and calls us into an intimate relationship with himself and this creator God.  We are also created in relationship with one another.  The creation of the human family is told in the creation of Eve from a part of Adam.  We are part one of another, and just as we were created in the image of, and in relation to God, we were created from and in relation to, one another.  We are created from the dust of the ground and are created in relationship with this earth from which we were formed, and we are called to care for and love this creation.  This is the threefold creation relationship; Created by God, from the earth, for one another in a loving relationship with all.  

holy sarks


Friday August 31st, John 6: 61 Aware that his disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to them, "Does this offend you? 62 What if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was before! 63 The Spirit gives life; the flesh counts for nothing. The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are life. John’s Gospel was written to a group that largely consisted of Gnostics who believed in the dualistic nature of humanity, with the pre-existent spirit living within the earthly body.  You could call them first century Mormons.  For them, the Spirit was good, and the body, or sarks, was evil.  Jesus’ talk of eating his flesh and drinking his blood would have been a major offense to them.  It most likely turned their stomach.  Here John is bringing the dualistic aspect of Spirit and Body together.  It is not a matter of escaping the evil of this world in some spiritual journey, but rather, living in and loving this world and those who live in it as brothers and sisters in Christ.  

also life


Saturday September 1st, John 6: 66 From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him. 67 "You do not want to leave too, do you?" Jesus asked the Twelve. 68 Simon Peter answered him, "Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. 69 We believe and know that you are the Holy One of God."  Jesus’ sayings were hard for his followers back then to take, just as it is hard for his followers today to take.  There are people out there who are hard to love.  It would be much easier to only love the loveable and those like us.  It is easier to create in and out groups and “axis’ of evil” than it is to love one another.  That is, until we realize that Jesus has the words of eternal life.  Love the Lord your God with all your heart and soul and mind and your neighbor as yourself.  It’s not easy, it is work.  It is also, life.  

8/13/2012

10W for August 24th, Bartholomew

The following is a 10 minute worship for August 24th, Bartholomew. You can either listen on the flash player below or download it to your favorite music program to sync with your mp3 player by clicking on "DOWNLOAD" or play it on your smartphone's music player by clicking PLAY. You now also have the option of receiving these notices each week and on festival days by signing up for the 10W constant contact email list on the 10W blog or on your phone by texting 10W to 22828. The song for the day is,"We are Called" by Dakota Road from the CD "All Are Welcome" which can be purchased HERE

Poem based on John 1:43-51 St. Bartholomew, Apostle


out of a world of doubt
crashing through
with words still on his lips
of a culture well worn
a people nurtured at the hand of God
and yet
a culture shed at the words of knowing
history set aside
for the sake of all time
            (Rabbi)
and all people
called out of a life
of known
to a life of unknown
            (You are the Son of God)
that would bring all life
to a newness
promised from before all time
            (you are the King of Israel)
for all people


10W for August 19th, Corpus Christi.

The following is a 10 minute worship for August 19th, Corpus Christi. You can either listen on the flash player below or download it to your favorite music program to sync with your mp3 player by clicking on "DOWNLOAD" or play it on your smartphone's music player by clicking PLAY. You now also have the option of receiving these notices each week and on festival days by signing up for the 10W constant contact email list on the 10W blog or on your phone by texting 10W to 22828. The song for the day is,"Bread in a Basket" by Dakota Road from the CD "All are Welcome" which can be purchased HERE

 

Poem, John 6:51-58


12th Sunday after Pentecost
John 6:51-58

Your presence we feel
As we gather
At the table you have set
With your life
Where partaking
Is more than just
--the Bread
----and the wine
it is of You
you life
the word of God
that  pushes us beyond
our understanding
beyond our comfort
to who You are beyond our life
to what we are
beyond an understanding
that anything could ever be
the same
for to partake of you
brings
--us life

seven pillars


Sunday August 19th, Proverbs 9: Wisdom has built her house; she has hewn out its seven pillars.  She has prepared her meat and mixed her wine; she has also set her table.  She has sent out her maids, and she calls from the highest point of the city.  "Let all who are simple come in here!"  Wisdom was highly regarded at the time of Solomon and in some cases was considered the calling of what would now be known as the Holy Spirit.  Seven was a Holy number and thus when the anti-christ is noted as 666 in the book of Revelation, it is simply referring to someone who is not 777.  Instead of Holiness abounding, there is want-a-be abounding, but not quite making it.  So the seven pillars are the holiness and perfection that are the foundation of the house of wisdom.  Here the calling is for all who are simple to come into the place prepared.  All who are simple seems like an odd definition.  But think of those who are not simple, those who weave complex plots to get ahead, to out due the other person, to take advantage, in other words, the movers and the shakers in society, they are the excluded ones.  In Matthew 5 and Luke 6, Jesus said it something like this; blessed are the meek, blessed are the poor, blessed are the persecuted, blessed are those who hunger and thrust.  Perhaps we should have these words above church doors, as well as a congressional mission statement. Let all who are simple come in here.

simple


Monday August 20th, Proverbs 9: Wisdom says to those who lack judgment. "Come, eat my food and drink the wine I have mixed. Leave your simple ways and you will live; walk in the way of understanding. There is an old saying from the world war days that goes, “there are no atheists in fox holes.”   It is the simple, those without all the know it all demeanor that are open to learning, just as it is the person in a fox hole, with bullets flying overhead, who finds themselves stripped of all pretense, who can finally hear the voice of God.   What they are open to learn is the way of God.  It is very hard to teach someone who knows it all.  The first step to hearing the word of God is to drop what you think it says.  Today we have a religious atmosphere in which the fundamentalists of all the major religions are busy fighting other fundamentalists, and sometimes calling them names like terrorists.  Fundamentalists see black and white, for us or against us.  But it is the simple that see a sea of gray and are willing to ask God to help them navigate it.  It is hard to hear what the teacher says when you are yelling.

your mission


Tuesday August 21st, Ephesians 5: 15 Look carefully then how you walk! Live purposefully, worthily, and accurately, not as the unwise and witless, but as wise, sensible, intelligent people, 16 Making the very most of the time, because the days are evil.  And we could add to that that these days are evil also.  The advice stands however, live purposefully, worthily and accurately.  Laura Beth Jones in her book “The Path,” points out that in life we either live our mission in life, or we live someone else’s mission in life.  The call of a Christian is to find the path that God has for you in your life.  Where are you called to in life?  How are you called to serve?  Where is that intersection between your passions and the teachings of Christ?  Instead of following along dumbly, open your Bible, think, read, and pray.  There are many churches that will be distributing voting guides this fall to tell Christians who to vote for.  I refuse to let them in the church.  What I ask everyone to do is to take a block of time and sit down the week before the election, pick one of the Gospels, read it all the way through, pray and then go vote.  Make the very most of your time by being the person God has called you to be, not what someone else says the word of god says you should do.  

super-size with no regret


Wednesday August 22nd, Ephesians 5:  18 And do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery; but ever be filled and stimulated with the Holy Spirit.  Ever since the garden experience in Eden we have been trying to fill that emptiness inside with something we ingest. Whether it be the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, rotgut whiskey, super-sized fast food or finely aged Pinot, we try to get back to that connected garden feeling.  In our search for something to make us feel whole we go down many a destructive path. The only ingesting that works is ingesting the word of God.  Remember the food pyramid, starting with sweets and fats with one serving and working its way down to 6 or more servings of grains?  The bottom or base of that pyramid is often missing. The foundation is the one that says that a healthy diet, one that will fill you up and take away those hunger pains, is to add 8 or more helpings of prayer and scripture reading every day.  If you want you can super-size that without negative consequences.  

aware of blessedness


Thursday August 23rd, Ephesians 5: 20 At all times and for everything giving thanks in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God the Father. One of the true joys in life is to be aware that you live in a state of blessedness.  To be able to look around and truly see that all that you have and all that surrounds you is a gift from God and is a blessing in your life, even seeing a blessing in some of the things that do not seem so good, the hard times, the struggles and yes even the pain.  Not that everything is a blessing from God, but sometimes, just the ability to make it through today in spite of all the rough terrain is the blessing.  Call upon the Lord in everything in your life, and watch your life change.  

in the way


Friday August 24th,  John 6: 53 But Jesus didn't give an inch. "Only insofar as you eat and drink flesh and blood, the flesh and blood of the Son of Man, do you have life within you.  These words would have been very offensive to his hearers.  The idea of eating flesh and being in contact with blood was an abomination.  All the safety nets we surround our life with, our rules, our customs, even many of our beliefs, they can be roadblocks that keep us from Christ.  Making Christ the very essence of our being however, that is where life comes from.  Being a Christian is less about doing, or a way of doing than it is about a way of being.  It is about Christ being the very center of our life, our all in all.  What rituals, beliefs, rules, customs get in the way of having Christ the center of life?  If it does not fit into loving God and loving others, it is just a distraction.  

blaming the victim


Saturday August 25th, John 6: 54 The one who brings a hearty appetite to this eating and drinking has eternal life and will be fit and ready for the Final Day.  Living in the presence of Christ is what life is all about.  Rather than making sure everyone else is doing things right we need to focus on whether we are treating others as the children of God.  Rather than making sure everyone else is living a moral life by our standards, we need to focus on whether we are living a moral life by God’s standards.   God’s standards are simple, love God with all your being, and love others as brothers and sisters in Christ, whether you like them or not.  In the run up to the election look at how the rhetoric blames the victims of our greed in this world. In Jesus world we are all the children of God and our calling is recognize that and love one another.  

8/06/2012

Poem for Mary, Mother of our Lord on August 15th


Mary, Mother of our Lord
Luke 1:46-55

Sing of the Joy that has come
Sing in the hearts of all the people
that now is the time
and the place
for the greatness of the Lord
to come to the people
Sing for the mighty of this world
given new life
toppled from their self made towers
of pride and anxiety
Sing for the powerful of this world
who have been given new life
brought from their mighty thrones of power
with eyes opened toward Christ
seen face to face
in the eyes of poor and hungry
Sing for the humble
in the new hope that life brings
in a world that offered no hope
and Sing for the hungry
who hunger no more
but who are filled with life
and hope
at the one carried in the womb
of  Mary
to a world never the same again
filled with Song


10W for August 15th, Mary, Mother of our Lord

The following is a 10 minute worship for August 15th, Mary, Mother of our Lord. You can either listen on the flash player below or download it to your favorite music program to sync with your mp3 player by clicking on "DOWNLOAD" or play it on your smartphone's music player by clicking PLAY. You now also have the option of receiving these notices each week and on festival days by signing up for the 10W constant contact email list on the 10W blog or on your phone by texting 10W to 22828. The song for the day is,"Magnificat" by John Michael Talbot from the CD "50 Songs of Christmas" which can be purchased HERE

10W for August 12th, Bread of Heaven, P11.

The following is a 10 minute worship for August 12th, Bread of Heaven, P11.  You can either listen on the flash player below or download it to your favorite music program to sync with your mp3 player by clicking on "DOWNLOAD" or play it on your smartphone's music player by clicking PLAY. You now also have the option of receiving these notices each week and on festival days by signing up for the 10W constant contact email list on the 10W blog or on your phone by texting 10W to 22828. The song for the day is,"One Body Broken" by the Jay Beech Band from the CD "One Body Alive" which can be purchased HERE

Poem for John 6:41-51


11th Sunday After Pentecost
John 6:41-51

We ate from the manna
Provided
For all to eat
When the people were in need
And were filled.
We were given the land
And the knowledge
To make our people Great
And were filled.
We were given the word
Sustaining us
Through time of hardship
Forgotten too often
Through times of prosperity
It added a richness
--to our lives
a wholeness
without which
--we would not exist
and we were filled.
We hunger Lord
For the living Bread
That will sustain us
Through hardship and prosperity,
We long to come to You O Lord
Drawn by
The love that has been
And the love that lives now
Eternal
And to be filled 

Opening Litany based on Psalm 34



Pastor: I will exult the Lord at all times in my life.  The Praise of the Lord will be forever on my lips. 

Congregation: We too will glory in the Lord.  Let all who are afflicted hear the good news of the Lord and rejoice with us as we exult the name of the Lord together. 

Pastor: In my time of need, when I sought after the Lord, the Lord answered me and delivered me from all my fears.  The Lord will do the same for you!

Congregation: Those who dwell in the presence of the Lord… their faces are radiant and never covered with shame.

Pastor: The ones that the world rejects who call upon the name of the Lord.. the Lord will be with them and help them in the midst of their troubles.

Congregation: The angel of the Lord encamps around those who live in awe of the Lord and the Lord delivers them from all the woes and cares of this world. 

Pastor: As we gather around the table of the Lord this day, taste and see that the LORD is good and blessed is the one who takes refuge in the Lord. 

Congregation: As the Holy people of God, we will live in awe of the wonders of the Lord, for those who live this way lack nothing of importance in this life. 

Pastor: the strong and mighty may grow weak and hungry, but those who seek the Lord lack no good thing.  So come my children, listen, and learn to live in awe of the wonders of the Lord.  Whoever loves the Lord, and desires to live in the blessings of the Lord, keep your tongue from evil, your lips from telling lies, turn from evil and seek peace in this world. 

Congregation: For the Lord looks upon the righteous and hears the cries of their hearts, but the God of Grace turns a deaf ear to those who seek evil. 

Pastor: The righteous cry and the Lord hears them, the brokenhearted and those for whom the world has crushed their spirit wail and the Lord delivers them from their troubles. 

Congregation:   The righteous may have many troubles, but the LORD delivers them and protects them from being broken.  

Pastor: Evil will slay the wicked and the foes of the righteous will be condemned but the Lord will rescue those who love the Lord.

Congregation: All who take refuge in the Lord will live surrounded by the greatness of God’s grace.  

  • Facebook me